Classic Audiobook Collection - The Majesty of Calmness by William George Jordan ~ Full Audiobook [self help]

Episode Date: June 3, 2023

The Majesty of Calmness by William George Jordan audiobook. Genre: self help In The Majesty of Calmness, William George Jordan offers a timeless guide to cultivating inner steadiness in a noisy, reac...tive world. Through short, pointed chapters, he argues that calmness is not passivity but a form of strength - a practiced self-command that clarifies judgment, steadies emotion, and influences others without force. Drawing on vivid examples from everyday conflicts, public life, and private worry, Jordan explores how irritability, haste, and fear can quietly sabotage character, relationships, and work. He invites the listener to treat serenity as a discipline: to pause before speaking, to meet criticism without being ruled by it, and to turn setbacks into training for the mind. Along the way, he examines themes of self-control, courage under pressure, and the moral power of composure, presenting calmness as a kind of personal leadership that radiates outward. Practical in tone and inspirational in aim, this classic of character-building encourages anyone facing stress, ambition, or uncertainty to reclaim attention, simplify the inner life, and live from a centered place where clear purpose can take root. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 1 (00:09:11) Chapter 2 (00:19:14) Chapter 3 (00:29:17) Chapter 4 (00:40:43) Chapter 5 (00:53:05) Chapter 6 (01:07:58) Chapter 7 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 The Majesty of Calmness by William George Jordan. Chapter 1 The Majesty of Calmness Calmness is the rarest quality in human life. It is the poise of a great nature in harmony with itself and its ideals. It is the moral atmosphere of a life self-centered, self-reliant, and self-controlled.
Starting point is 00:00:25 Calmness is singleness of purpose, absolute confidence and conscious power, ready to be focused in an instant to meet any crisis. The Spinks is not a true type of calmness. Petrification is not calmness. It is death, the silencing of all the energies, while no one lives his life more fully, more intensely, and more consciously than the man who is calm. The fatalist is not calm. He is a man. He is a very much. He is, the coward slave of his environment, hopelessly surrendering to his present condition, recklessly indifferent to his future. He accepts his life as a rudderless ship, drifting on the ocean of time. He has no compass, no chart, no known port to which he is sailing. His self-confessed inferiority to all nature is shown in his existence of constant surrender. It is not, calmness. The man who is calm has his course in life clearly marked on his chart. His hand is ever on the helm. Storm, fog, night, tempest, danger, hidden reefs he is ever prepared and ready for them.
Starting point is 00:01:44 He is made calm and serene by the realization that in these crises of his voyage he needs a clear mind and a cool head, that he has not to do but to do each day the best he can. by the light he has, that he will never flinch nor falter for a moment, that though he may have to tack and leave his course for a time, he will never drift, he will get back into the true channel, he will keep ever-headed toward his harbor. When he will reach it, how he will reach it, matters not to him. He rests in calmness, knowing he has done his best. If his best seems to be overthrown or overruled, then he must still bow his head in calmness. To know man is permitted to know the future of his life, the finality. God commits to man ever only new beginnings,
Starting point is 00:02:41 new wisdom, and new days, to use the best of his knowledge. Calmness comes ever from within. It is the peace and restfulness of the depths of our nature. The fury of storm and of wind agitate only the surface of the sea. They can penetrate only two or three hundred feet. Below that is the calm, unruffled deep. To be ready for the great crises of life, we must learn serenity in our daily living. Calmness is the crown of self-control. When the worries and cares of the day fret you and begin to wear upon you, and you chafe under the friction, be calm. up, rest for a moment, and let calmness and peace assert themselves. If you let these irritating
Starting point is 00:03:33 outside influences get the better of you, you are confessing your inferiority to them, by permitting them to dominate you. Study the disturbing elements, each by itself, bring all the willpower of your nature to bear upon them, and you will find that they will, one by one melt into nothingness, like vapors fading before the sun. The glow of calmness that will then pervade your mind, the tingling sensation of an inflow of new strength, may be to you the beginning of the revelation of the supreme calmness that is possible for you.
Starting point is 00:04:12 Then in some great hour of your life, when you stand face to face with some awful trial, when the structure of your ambition and life work crumbles in a moment. You will be brave. You can then fold your arms calmly. Look out undismayed and undaunted upon the ashes of your hope, upon the wreck of what you have faithfully built, and with brave heart and unfaltering voice you may say, so let it be. I will build again. When the tongue of malice and slander, the persecution of inferiority, tempts you for just a moment to retaliate. when for an instant you forget yourself so far as to hunger for revenge, be calm.
Starting point is 00:04:59 When the gray heron is pushed by its enemy, the eagle, it does not run to escape, it remains calm, takes a dignified stand, and waits quietly, facing the enemy unmoved. With the terrific force with which the eagle makes its attack, the boasted king of birds is often impaled, and run through on the corner. quiet, Lance-like Bill of the Huron. The means that man takes to kill another's character becomes suicide of his own. No man in the world ever attempted to wrong another without being injured in return, some way, somehow, some time. The only weapon of offense that nature seems to recognize is the boomerang. Nature keeps her books admirably. She puts down every item. She closes
Starting point is 00:05:50 all accounts finally, but she does not always balance them at the end of the month. To the man who is calm, revenge is so far beneath him that he cannot reach it, even by stooping. When injured he does not retaliate, he wraps around himself the royal robes of calmness, and he goes quietly on his way. When the hand of death touches the one we hold dearest, paralyzes our energy, and eclipses the son of our life. The calmness that has been accumulating in long years becomes in a moment our refuge, our reserve strength. The most subtle of all temptations is the seeming success of the wicked. It requires moral courage to see, without flinching, material prosperity coming to men who are dishonest, to see politicians rise into prominence, power and wealth by trickery and corruption,
Starting point is 00:06:49 to see virtue in rags and vice and velvets, to see ignorance at a premium and knowledge at a discount. To the man who is really calm, these puzzles of life do not appeal. He is living his life as best he can. He is not worrying about the problems of justice, whose solution must be left to omniscience to solve. When man has developed the spirit of calmness, until it becomes so absolutely part of him, him that his very presence radiates it. He has made great progress in life. Calmness cannot be acquired of itself and by itself. It must come as the culmination of a series of virtues. What the world needs and what individuals need is a higher standard of living, a great realizing
Starting point is 00:07:41 sense of the privilege and dignity of life, a higher and nobler conception of individuality. With this great sense of calmness permeating an individual, man becomes able to retire more into himself, away from the noise, the confusion and the strife of the world, which comes to his ears only as faint, far-off rumblings, or as the tumult of the life of a city, heard only as a buzzing hum by the man in a balloon. The man who is calm does not selfishly isolate himself from the world, for he is intensely interested in all that concerns the welfare of humanity. His calmness is but a holy of holies, into which he can retire from the world to get strength to live in the world.
Starting point is 00:08:31 He realizes that the full glory of individuality, the crowning of his self-control, is the majesty of calmness. End of Chapter 1. Recording by Andrea Fiore. Chapter 2 of the Majesty of Calmness. This Libravox recording is in the public domain. Recording by Andrea Fiore. The Majesty of Calmness by William George Jordan.
Starting point is 00:09:03 Chapter 2. Hurry. The Scourge of America. The first sermon in the world was preached at the creation. It was a divine protest against hurry. It was a divine object lesson of perfect law, perfect plan, perfect order perfect method six days of work carefully planned scheduled and completed were followed by rest whether we accept the story as literal or as figurative as the account of successive days or of ages comprising millions of years matters little if we but learn the lesson nature is very un-american nature never hurries every phase of her working shows plans
Starting point is 00:09:49 calmness, reliability, and the absence of hurry. Hurry always implies lack of definite method, confusion, impatience of slow growth. The Tower of Babel, the world's first skyscraper, was a failure because of hurry. The workers mistook their arrogant ambition for inspiration. They had too many builders and no architect. They thought to make up the lack of a head, by superfluity of hands. This is a characteristic of hurry. It seeks ever to make energy a substitute for a clearly defined plan. The result is ever as hopeless as trying to transform a hobby horse into a real steed by brisk riding. Hurry is a counterfeit of haste. Haste has an ideal, a distinct aim to be realized by the quickest direct methods. Haste has a single compass,
Starting point is 00:10:49 upon which it relies for direction and in harmony with which its course is determined. Hurry says, I must move faster. I will get three compasses. I will have them different. I will be guided by all of them. One of them will probably be right. Hurry never realizes that slow, careful foundation work is the quickest in the end. Hurry has ruined more Americans than has any other word in the vocabulary of life. It is the scourge of America and is both a cause and a result of our high-pressure civilization. Hurry adroitly assumes so many masquerades of disguise that its identity is not always recognized. Hurry always pays the highest price for everything, and usually the goods are not delivered. In the race for wealth, men often sacrifice time,
Starting point is 00:11:47 energy, health, home, happiness and honor, everything that money cannot buy, the very things that money can never bring back. Hurry is a phantom of paradoxes, businessmen, and their desire to provide for the future happiness of their family, often sacrifice the present happiness of wife and children on the altar of hurry. They forget that their place in the home should be something greater than being merely the man that pays the bills. They expect consideration and thoughtfulness, that they are not giving. We hear too much of a wife's duties to a husband, and too little of the other side of the question. The wife, they tell us, should meet her husband with a smile and a kiss, should tactfully watch his moods, and be ever-sweetness and sunshine. Why this continual
Starting point is 00:12:43 swinging of the censor of devotion to the man of business? Why should a woman have to look up with timid glance at the face of her husband to size up his mood? Has not her day, too, been one of care and responsibility and watchfulness? Has not mother-love been working over perplexing problems and worries of home and of the training of the children that wifely love may make her seek to solve in secret? Is man then the weaker sex that he must be pampered, and treated as tenderly as, of boil trying to keep from contact with the world? In their hurry to attain some ambition to gratify the dream of life, men often throw honor, truth, and generosity to the winds. Politicians
Starting point is 00:13:31 dare to stand by and see a city poisoned with foul water until they see where they come in on a waterworks appropriation. If it be necessary to poison an army, that too is but an incident in the hurry for wealth. This is the age of the hot house. The element of natural growth is pushed to one side, and the hot house and the force pump are substituted. Nature looks on tolerantly, as she says, So far you may go, but no farther, my foolish children. The educational system of today is a monumental institution dedicated to hurry. The children are forced to go through a series of studies that sweep the circle of all human wisdom. They are given everything that the ambitious ignorance of the age can force into their minds. They are taught everything but the essentials,
Starting point is 00:14:29 how to use their sense, and how to think. Their minds become congested by a great mass of undigested facts, and still the cruel, barbarous forcing goes on. You watch it until it seems you cannot stand at a moment longer, and you instinctively put out your hand and say, stop. This modern slaughter of the innocence must not go on. Education smiles suavely, waves her hand complacently towards her thousands of knowledge prisons over the country, and says, Who are you that dare speak a word against our sacred school system? Education is in a hurry, because she falls in 15 years to do what half the time should accomplish by better methods, she should not be too boastful. Incompetence is not always a reason for pride, and they hurry the children into a hundred
Starting point is 00:15:23 textbooks, then into ill health, then into the college, then into a diploma, then into life, with a dazed mind, untrained and unfitted for the real duties of living. Hurry is the death blow to calmness, to dignity, to poise. The old-time courtesy went out when the new-time hurry came in. Hurry is the father of dyspepsia. In the rush of our national life, the bolting of food has become a national vice. The words, quick lunches,
Starting point is 00:15:56 might properly be placed on thousands of headstones in our cemeteries. Man forgets that he is the only animal that dines, the others merely feed. Why does he abrogate his right to dine and go to the end of the line with the mere feeders. His self-respecting stomach rebels and expresses its indignation by indigestion. Then man has to go through life
Starting point is 00:16:21 with a little bottle of pepsin tablets in his vest pocket. He is but another victim to this craze for speed. Hurry means the breakdown of the nerves. It is the royal road to nervous prostration. Everything that is great in life is the product of slow growth, the newer and greater and higher and nobler the work, the slower is its growth, the surer is
Starting point is 00:16:46 its lasting success. Mushrooms attain their full power in a night. Oaks require decades. A fad lives its life in a few weeks. A philosophy lives through generations and centuries. If you are sure you are right, do not let the voice of the world or of friends or a family swerve you for a moment from your purpose. Accept slow growth if it must be slow, and know the results must come, as you would accept the long, lonely hours of the night, with absolute assurance that the heavy-leaded moments
Starting point is 00:17:22 must bring the morning. Let us as individuals banish the word hurry from our lives. Let us care for nothing so much that we would pay honor and self-respect as the price of hurrying it. Let us cultivate calmness, restfulness, poise, sweetness, doing our best, bearing all things as bravely as we can, living our life undisturbed by the prosperity of the wicked or the malice of the envious. Let us not be impatient, chaffing at delay, fretting over failure, wearying over
Starting point is 00:17:59 results, and weakening under opposition. Let us ever turn our face toward the future. with confidence and trust, with the calmness of a life in harmony with itself, true to its ideals, and slowly and constantly progressing toward their realization. Let us see that cowardly word hurry in all its most degenerating phases, let us see that it ever kills truth, loyalty, thoroughness, and let us determine that, day by day, we will seek more and more to substitute for it, the calmness and repose of a true life, nobly lived. End of Chapter 2. Recording by Andrea Fiori.
Starting point is 00:18:51 Chapter 3 of the Majesty of Calmness. This Libervox recording is in the public domain. Recording by Andrea Fiore. The Majesty of Calmness by William George Jordan. Chapter 3. The Power of Personal Influence The only responsibility that a man cannot evade in this life is the one he thinks of least, his personal influence. Man's conscious influence, when he is on dress parade, when he is posing to impress those around him, is woefully small. But his unconscious influence,
Starting point is 00:19:31 the silent, subtle radiation of his personality, the effect of his words and acts, the trifles he never considered, is tremendous. Every moment of life he is changing to a degree the life of the whole world. Every man has an atmosphere which is affecting every other.
Starting point is 00:19:51 So silent and unconsciously is this influence working that man may forget that it exists. All the forces of nature, heat, light, electricity, and gravitation are silent and invisible. We never see them, we only know that they exist by seeing the effects they produce in all nature the wonders of the scene are dwarfed into insignificance when compared with the majesty and the glory of the unseen
Starting point is 00:20:24 the great sun itself does not supply enough heat and light to sustain animal and vegetable life on the earth we are dependent for nearly half of our light and heat upon the stars and the greater part of this supply of light of life giving energy, comes from invisible stars, millions of miles from Earth. In a thousand ways, nature constantly seeks to lead men to a keener and deeper realization of the power and the wonder of the invisible. Into the hands of every individual is given a marvelous power for good or for evil, the silent, unconscious, unseen influence of his life. This is simply the constant radiation of what a man really. is, not what he pretends to be. Every man by his mere living is radiating sympathy or sorrow
Starting point is 00:21:17 or morbidness or cynicism, or happiness, or hope, or any of a hundred other qualities. Life is a state of constant radiation and absorption. To exist is to radiate. To exist is to be the recipient of radiations. There are men and women whose presence seems to radiate sunshine, cheer and optimism. You feel calmed and rested and restored in a moment to a new and stronger faith in humanity. There are others who focus in an instant all your latent distrust, morbidness, and rebellion against life. Without knowing why, you chafe and fret in their presence. You lose your bearings on life and its problems. Your moral compass is disturbed and unsatisfactory. It is made untrue in an instant as the magnetic needle of a ship is deflected when it passes near great
Starting point is 00:22:15 mountains of iron ore. There are men who float down the stream of life like icebergs, cold, reserved, unapproachable, and self-contained. In their presence you involuntarily draw your wraps closer around you as you wonder who left the door open. These refrigerated human beings have a most depressing influence on all who fall under the spell of their radiated chilliness. But there are other natures, warm, helpful, genial, who are like the Gulf Stream, following their own course, flowing undaunted and undismayed in the ocean of colder waters. Their presence brings warmth and life and the glow of sunshine, the joyous stimulating breath of spring. There are men who are like malarious swamps, poison, and, and the glow of sunshine, the joyous,
Starting point is 00:23:07 depressing, and weakening by their very presence. They make heavy, oppressive, and gloomy, the atmosphere of their own homes, the sound of the children's play is stilled, the ripples of laughter are frozen by their presence. They go through life as if each day were a new big funeral, and they were always chief mourners. There are other men who seem like the ocean. They are constantly bracing, stimulating, giving new dots of top. iconic life and strength by their very presence. There are men who are insincere in heart, and that insincerity is radiated by their presence. They have a wondrous interest in your welfare, when they need you. They put on a property smile so suddenly, when it serves their purpose,
Starting point is 00:23:57 that it seems the smile must be connected with some electric button concealed in their clothes. Their voice has a simulated cordiality that long training may have made almost natural. But they never play their part absolutely true. The mask will slip down sometimes. Their cleverness cannot teach their eyes the look of sterling honesty. They may deceive some people, but they cannot deceive all. There is a subtle power of revelation which makes us say, Well, I cannot explain how it is, but I know that man is not honest. Man cannot escape for one moment from this radiation of his character,
Starting point is 00:24:39 this constantly weakening or strengthening of others. He cannot evade the responsibility by saying it is an unconscious influence. He can select the qualities that he will permit to be radiated. He can cultivate sweetness, calmness, trust, generosity, truth, justice, loyalty, nobility, make them vitally active in his character, and by these qualities he will constantly affect the world. Discouragement often comes to honest souls trying to live the best they can, in the thought that they are doing so little good in the world. Triples, unnoted by us, may be links in the chain of some great purpose. In 1797, William Godman wrote The Inquirer, a collection of revolutionary essays on morals and politics. The book influenced Thomas Malthus to write his essay on population, published in 1798.
Starting point is 00:25:41 Malthus' book suggested, to Charles Darwin, a point of view upon which he devoted many years of his life, resulting, in 1859, in the publication of the origin of species, the most influential book of the 19th century, a book that has revolutionized all science. These words, were but three links of influence extending over 60 years. It might be possible to trace this genealogy of influence back from Godwin, through generation and generation, to the word or act of some shepherd in early Britain, watching his flock upon the hills, living his quiet life, and dying with the thought that he had done nothing to help the world. men and women have duties to others and duties to themselves injustice to ourselves we should refuse to live in an atmosphere that keeps us from living our best if the fault be in us we should master it
Starting point is 00:26:43 if it be the personal influence of others that like a noxious vapor kills our best impulses we should remove from that influence if we can possibly move without forsaking duties If it be wrong to move, then we should take strong doses of moral quainine to counteract the malaria of influence. It is not what those around us do for us that counts. It is what they are to us. We carry our houseplants from one window to another to give them proper heat, light, air, and moisture. Should we not be at least as careful of ourselves? To make our influence felt we must live our faith, We must practice what we believe. A maggot does not attract iron as iron. It must first convert the iron into another magnet before it can attract it. It is useless for a parent to try to teach gentleness to her children
Starting point is 00:27:42 when she herself is cross and irritable. The child who is told to be truthful and who hears a parent lie cleverly to escape some little social unpleasantness is not going to cling very zealously to truth. The parents' words say, don't lie. The influence of the parent's life says, Do lie. No man can ever isolate himself to evade this constant power of influence, as no single corpusical can rebel and escape from the general course of the blood. No individual is so insignificant as to be without influence. The changes in our varying moods are all recorded in the delicate parameters of the lives of others. We should ever let our influence
Starting point is 00:28:30 filter through human love and sympathy. We should not be merely an influence. We should be an inspiration. By our very presence, we should be a tower of strength to the hungering human souls around us. End of Chapter 3. Recording by Andrea Fiore. Chapter 4 of the Majesty of Calmness This Libervox recording is in the public domain Recording by Andrea Fiore The Majesty of Calmness by William George Jordan Chapter 4
Starting point is 00:29:08 The Dignity of Self-Reliance Self-confidence Without Self-Confidence is as useless as a cooking recipe without food Self-confidence sees the possibilities of the individual self-reliance realizes them. Self-confidence sees the angel in the unhewn block of marble. Self-reliance carves it out for himself. The man who is self-reliance says ever, no one can realize my possibilities for me but me. No one can make me good or evil but myself. He works out his own salvation, financially, socially, mentally, physically, and morally. Life is an individual
Starting point is 00:29:54 problem that man must solve for himself. Nature accepts no vicarious sacrifice, no vicarious service. Nature never recognizes a proxy vote. She has nothing to do with middlemen. She deals only with the individual. Nature is constantly seeking to show man that, that he is his own best friend or his own worst enemy. Nature gives man the option on which he will be to himself. All the athletic exercises in the world are of no value to the individual, unless he compel those bars and dumbbells to yield to him and strengthen muscle, the power for which he himself pays in time and effort.
Starting point is 00:30:40 He can never develop his muscles by sending his valet to the gymnasium. and chess of the world are powerless in all the united efforts to help the individual until he reach out and take for himself what is needed for his individual weaknesses. All the religions of the world are but speculations and morals, mere theories of salvation, until the individual realize that he must save himself by relying on the law of truth as he sees it and living his life in harmony with it as fully as he can. But religion is not a Pullman car with soft cushioned seats where he has but to pay for his ticket, and someone else does all the rest. In religion, as in all great things, he has ever thrown back on his self-reliance. He should accept all
Starting point is 00:31:34 helps, but he must live his own life. He should not feel that he is a mere passenger. He is an engineer, and the train is his life. We must rely on ourselves, live our own lives, or we merely drift through existence, losing all that is best, all that is greatest, all that is divine. All that others can do for us is to give us opportunity. We must ever be prepared for the opportunity when it comes, and to go after it and find it when it does not come, or that opportunity is to us, nothing. Life is but a succession of opportunities. They are for good or evil, as we make them. Many of the alchemists of old felt that they lacked but one element. If they could obtain that one, they believe they could transmute the baser metals into pure gold. It is so in
Starting point is 00:32:32 character. There are individuals with rare mental gifts, and delicate spiritual discernment who fail utterly in life because they lack the one element, self-reliance. This would unite all their energies, and focus them into strength and power. The man who is not self-reliant is weak, hesitating, and doubting in all he does. He fears to take a decisive step, because he dreads failure, because he is waiting for someone to advise him, or because he dare not act in accordance with his own best judgment. In his cowardice and in his conceit, he sees all his non-successes due to others.
Starting point is 00:33:14 He is not appreciated, not recognized. He is kept down. He feels that in some subtle way society is conspiring against him. He grows almost vain as he thinks that no one has had such poverty, such sorrow, such affliction, such failure as have come to him. The man who is self-reliance seeks ever to discover, and conquer the weakness within him, that keeps him from the attainment of what he holds dearest. He seeks within himself the power to battle against all outside influences.
Starting point is 00:33:49 He realizes that all the greatest men in history, in every phase of human effort, have been those who have had to fight against the odds of sickness, suffering, sorrow. To him, defeat is no more than passing through a tunnel is to a traveler. He knows he must emerge again. into the sunlight. The nation that is strongest is the one that is most self-reliant, the one that contains within its boundaries all that its people need. If with its ports all blockaded, it has not within itself the necessities of life and the elements of its continual progress, then it is weak, held by the enemy, and it is but a question of time till it must surrender.
Starting point is 00:34:33 Its independence is in proportion to its self-reliance, to its power to sustain itself from within. What is true of nations is true of individuals. The history of nations is but the biography of individuals magnified, intensified, multiplied, and projected on the screen of the past. History is the biography of a nation. Biography is the history of an individual. So it must be that the individual who is most strong in any trial,
Starting point is 00:35:06 sorrow or need, is he who can live from his inherent strength, who needs no scaffolding of commonplace sympathy to uphold him. He must ever be self-reliant. The wealth and prosperity of ancient Rome, relying on her slaves to do the real work of the nation, prove the nation's downfall.
Starting point is 00:35:26 The constant dependence on the captives of war to do the thousand details of life for them, killed self-reliance in the nation, and in the individual. Then, through weakened self-reliance and the increased opportunity for idle, luxurious ease that came with it,
Starting point is 00:35:43 Rome, a nation of fighters, became a nation of men more effeminate than women. As we depend on others to do those things we should do for ourselves, our self-reliance weakens, and our power and our control of them become continuously less.
Starting point is 00:36:00 Man to be great must be self-reliant. Though he may not be so in all things, he must be self-reliant in the one in which he would be great. This self-reliance is not the self-sufficiency of conceit. It is daring to stand alone. Be an oak, not a vine. Be ready to give support, but do not crave it. Do not depend on it. To develop your true self-reliance, you must see from the very beginning that life is a battle you must fight for yourself.
Starting point is 00:36:31 You must be your own soldier. You cannot buy a substitute. You cannot win a reprieve. You can never be placed on the retired list. The retired list of life is death. The world is busy with its own care, sorrows, and joys, and pays little heed to you. There is but one great password to success. Self-reliance.
Starting point is 00:36:55 If you would learn to converse, put yourself into positions where you must speak. If you would conquer your morbidness, mingle with bright people around you, no matter how difficult it may be. If you desire the power that someone else possesses, do not envy his strength, and dissipate your own energy by weakly wishing his force were yours. Emulate the process by which it became his, depend on your own self-reliance, pay the price for it, and equal power may be yours. The individual must look upon himself as an investment of untold possibilities if rightly developed, a mind whose resources can never be known but by going down into it and bringing out what is hidden. Man can develop his self-reliance
Starting point is 00:37:44 by seeking constantly to surpass himself. We try too much to surpass others. If we seek ever to surpass ourselves, we are moving on a uniform line of progress that gives a harmonious unifying to our growth in all its parts. Daniel Morrill, at one time president of the Cambria rail works that employed 7,000 men and made a rail famed throughout the world, was asked the secret of the great excess of the works. We have no secret, he said, but this, we always try to beat our last batch of rails. Competition is good, but it has its danger side. There is a tendency to sacrifice real worth to mere appearance, to have seeming rather than reality. But the true competition is the competition of the individual with himself, his presence seeking to excel his past. This means real growth from
Starting point is 00:38:42 within. Self-reliance develops it, and it develops self-reliance. Let the individual feel thus as to his own progress and possibilities, and he can almost create his life as he will. Let him never fall down in despair at dangers and sorrows at a distance. May they be harmless, like Bunyan's stone lions, when he nears them. The man who is self-reliant does not live in the shadow of someone else's greatness. He thinks for himself, depends on himself, and acts for himself. And throwing the individual back upon himself, it is not shutting his eyes to the stimulus and light and new life that comes from the warm pressure of the hand, the kindly word and the sincere expressions of true friendship. But true friendship is rare, its great value is in a crisis, like a lifeboat. Many a boasted
Starting point is 00:39:38 friend has proved a leaking worthless lifeboat when the storm of adversity might make him useful. In these great crises of life, man is strong only as he is strong from within, and the more he depends on himself the stronger he will become, and the more able will he be to help others in the hour of their need. His very life will be a constant help and a strength to others, as he becomes to them a living lesson of the dignity of self-reliance. End of Chapter 4. Recording by Andrea Fiore. Chapter 5 of the Majesty of Calmness. This Librevox recording is in the public domain. recording by Andrea Fiori
Starting point is 00:40:26 The Majesty of Calmness by William George Jordan Chapter 5 Failure as a Success It oft times requires heroic courage to face fruitless effort To take up the broken strands of a life work To look bravely toward the future And proceed undaunted on our way
Starting point is 00:40:47 But what to our eyes may seem hopeless failure is often but the dawning of a greater success. It may contain in its debris the foundation material of a mighty purpose, or the revelation of new and higher possibilities. Some years ago it was proposed to send logs from Canada to New York by a new method. The ingenious plan of Mr. Joggins was to bind great logs together by cables and iron girders, and to tow the cargo as a raft. When the novel craft near New York and success seemed assured, a terrible storm arose.
Starting point is 00:41:26 In the fury of the tempest, the iron bands snapped like icicles, and the angry waters scattered the logs far and wide. The chief of the hydrographic department at Washington heard of the failure of the experiment, and at once sent word to shipmasters the world over, urging them to watch carefully for these logs, which he described, and to note the precise location of each in latitude and longitude, and the time the observation was made. Hundreds of captains sailing over the waters of the earth noted the logs, in the Atlantic Ocean, in the Mediterranean, in the South Seas, for into all waters did these venturesome ones travel. Hundreds of reports were made, covering a period of weeks and months. These observations were then carefully collated, systemized, and tabulated, and discoveries were made as to the course of ocean currents that otherwise would have been impossible. The loss of the Joggins raft was not a real failure,
Starting point is 00:42:30 for it led to one of the great discoveries in modern marine geography and navigation. In our superior knowledge we are disposed to speak in a patronizing tone of the follies of the alchemists of old. But their failure to transmute the baser metals into gold resulted in the birth of chemistry. They did not succeed in what they attempted, but they brought into vogue the natural processes of sublimation, filtration, distillation, and crystallization. They invented the Al imbeck, the retort,
Starting point is 00:43:05 the sand bath, the water bath, and other valuable instruments. To them is due the discovery of antimony, sulfuric ether and phosphorus, the copulation of gold and silver, the determining properties of salt patray and its use in gunpowder and the discovery of the distillation of essential oils. This was the success of failure, a wondrous process of nature for the highest growth, a mighty lesson of comfort, strength, and encouragement, if man would only realize and accept it. Many of our failures sweep us to greater heights of success than we ever hoped for in our wildest dreams.
Starting point is 00:43:47 Life is a successive unfolding of success from failure. In discovering America, Columbus failed absolutely. His ingenious reasoning and experiment led him to believe that by sailing westward he would reach India. Every Redman in America carries in his name, Indian, the perpetuation of the memory of the failure of Columbus. The Genoese navigator did not reach India, the cargo of souvenirs he took back to. to Spain to show to Ferdinand and Isabella's proofs of his success really attested his failure, but the discovery of America was a greater success than was any finding of a backdoor to India. When David Livingstone had supplemented his theological education by a medical course,
Starting point is 00:44:37 he was ready to enter the missionary field. For over three years he had studied tirelessly, with all energies concentrated on one aim, to spread. the gospel in China. The hour came when he was ready to start out with noble enthusiasm for his chosen work, to consecrate himself and his life to his unselfish ambition. Then word came from China that the Opium War would make it folly to attempt to enter the country. Disappointment and failure did not long daunt him. He offered himself as missionary to Africa, and he was accepted. His glorious failure to reach China opened a whole continent to light and truth. His study proved an ideal preparation for his labors as physician, explorer,
Starting point is 00:45:26 teacher, and evangel in the wilds of Africa. Business reverses and the failure of his partner threw upon the broad shoulders and the still broader honor and honesty of Sir Walter Scott, a burden of responsibility that forced him to write. the failure spurred him to almost superhuman effort the masterpieces of scotch historic fiction that have thrilled entertained and uplifted millions of his fellow-men are a glorious monument on the field of a seeming failure When Millett, the painter of Angelus, worked on his almost divine canvas, in which the very air seemed pulsing with the regenerating essence of spiritual reverence, he was painting against time, he was antidoting sorrow, he was racing against death. His brush strokes put on in the early morning hours before going to his menial duties as a railway porter in the dusk like that perpetrated on his canvas, meant strength, food. and medicine for the dying wife he adored. The art failure that cast him into the depths of poverty
Starting point is 00:46:35 unified with marvelous intensity all the finer elements of his nature. This rare spiritual unity, this purging of all the dross of triviality as he passed through the furnace of poverty, trial, and sorrow, gave eloquence to his brush, and enabled him to paint as never before, as no prosperity would have made possible. Failure is often the turning point, the pivot of circumstance that swings us to higher levels. It may not be financial success, it may not be fame, it may be new draughts of spiritual, moral, or mental inspiration that will change us for all the later years of our life. Life is not really what comes to us, but what we get from it.
Starting point is 00:47:22 Whether man has had wealth or poverty, failure or success, counts for little, when it is past. There is but one question for him to answer, to face boldly and honestly, as an individual alone with his conscience and his destiny. How will I let that poverty or wealth affect me? If that trial or deprivation has left me better, truer, nobler, then poverty has been riches, failure has been a success. If wealth has come to me and has made me vain, arrogant, contemptuous, uncharitable, cynical, closing me from all the tenderness of life, all the channels of higher development, of possible good to my fellow man, making me the mere custodian of a money-bag, then wealth has lied to me, it has been a failure, not success,
Starting point is 00:48:14 it has not been riches, it has been dark, treacherous poverty, that stole from me even myself. All things become for us then what we take from us from. them. Failure is one of God's educators. It is experience leading man to hire things. It is the revelation of a way, a path hitherto unknown to us. The best men in the world, those who have made the greatest real successes, look back with serene happiness on their failures. The turning of the face of time shows all things in a wondrously illuminated and satisfying perspective. Many a man is thankful. today that some petty success for which he once struggled, melted into thin air as his hand sought to clutch it. Failure is often the rock-bottom foundation of real success. If man in a few instances of his life can say, those failures were the best things in the world that could ever have happened to me. Should he not face new failures with undaunted courage and trust that the miraculous ministry of nature may transform these new stumbling blocks?
Starting point is 00:49:24 into new stepping stones. Our highest hopes are often destroyed to prepare us for better things. The failure of the caterpillar is the birth of the butterfly. The passing of the bud is the becoming of the rose. The death or destruction of the seed is the prelude to its resurrection as wheat. It is the night in the darkest hours, those preceding dawn, that plants grow best, that they most increase in size. May this not be one of nature's gentle showings to man of the times when he grows best, of the darkness of failure that is evolving into the sunlight of success. Let us fear only the failure of not living the right as we see it, leaving the results to the guardianship of the infinite. If we think of any supreme moment of our lives, any great success, anyone who is dear to us,
Starting point is 00:50:21 and then consider how we reach that moment, that success, that friend, we will be surprised and strengthened by the revelation. As we trace each one back step by step through the genealogy of circumstances, we will see how logical has been the course of our joy and success, from sorrow and failure, and that what gives us most happiness today is inextricably connected with what once caused us sorrow. many of our rivers of our greatest prosperity and growth have had their source and their trickling increase into volume among the dark gloomy recesses of our failure there is no honest and true work carried along with constant and sincere purpose that really ever fails if it sometimes seems to be wasted effort it will prove to us a new lesson of how to walk the secret of our failures will prove to us the inspiration of possible to us to us the inspiration of possible to us to us to us the possible to us to us successes. Man living with the highest aims ever as best as he can, in continuous harmony with them, in a success, no matter what statistics of failure and near-sighted and half-blind world of critics
Starting point is 00:51:36 and commentators may lay at his door. High ideals, noble efforts will make seeming failures but trifles. They need not dishearten us. They should prove sources of new strength. The rocky way may proof safer than the slippery path of smoothness. Birds cannot fly best with the wind but against it. Ships do not progress in calm, when the sails flap idly against the unstrained mass. The alchemy of nature, superior to that of Periscelsons, constantly transmutes the baser metals of failure into the later pure gold of higher success, if the mind of the worker be kept true, constant and untiring in the service, and he have that sublime courage that defies fate to its worst while he does his best.
Starting point is 00:52:28 End of Chapter 5. Recording by Andrea Fiore. Chapter 6 of the Majesty of Calmness. This Libervox recording is in the public domain. Recording by Andrea Fiore. The Majesty of Calmness by William George Jordan. Chapter 6. doing our best at all times. Life is a wondrously complex problem for the individual,
Starting point is 00:53:00 until someday, in a moment of illumination, he awakens to the great realization that he can make it simple, never quite simple, but always simpler. There are a thousand mysteries of right and wrong that have baffled the wise men of the ages. There are depths in the great fundamental questions of the human race that no plummet of philosophy has ever sounded. There are wild cries of honest hunger for truth
Starting point is 00:53:27 that seek to pierce the silence beyond the grave, but to them ever echo back, only a repetition of their unanswered cries. To us all comes at times the great note of questioning despair that darkens our horizon and paralyzes our effort. If there really be a God, if eternal justice really rule the world, we say,
Starting point is 00:53:50 Why should life be as it is? Why do some men starve while others feast? Why does virtue often languish in the shadow, while vice triumphs in the sunshine? Why does failure so often dogged the footsteps of honest effort, while the success that comes from trickery and dishonor is greeted with the world's applause? How is it that the loving father of one family is taken by death,
Starting point is 00:54:15 while the worthless encumbrance of another is spared? Why is there so much unnecessary pain, sorrowing, and suffering in the world? Why, indeed, should there be any? Neither philosophy nor religion can give any final satisfactory answer that is capable of logical demonstration of absolute proof. There is ever, even after the best explanations, a residum of the unexplained. We must then fall back in the eternal arms of faith, and be wise enough to say, I will not be disconcerted by these problems of life.
Starting point is 00:54:51 I will not permit them to plunge me into doubt, and to cloud my life with vagueness and uncertainty. Man arrogates much to himself when he demands from the infinite the full solution of all his mysteries. I will found my life on the impregnable rock of a simple fundamental truth. This glorious creation, with its millions of wondrous phenomena, pulsing ever in harmony with eternal law, must have a creator.
Starting point is 00:55:20 That creator must be obnissant and omnipotent. But that creator himself cannot, in justice, demand of any creature more than the best that that individual can give. I will do each day in every moment the best I can by the light I have. I will ever seek more light, more perfect illumination of truth, and ever live as best I can in harmony with the truth as I see it. If failure come I will meet it bravely, if my pathway then lie in the shadow of trial, sorrow, and suffering,
Starting point is 00:55:55 I shall have the restful peace and the calm strength of one who has done his best, who can look back upon the past with no pang of regret, and who has heroic courage in facing the results, whatever they be, knowing that he could not make them different. Upon this life plan, this foundation, man may erect any superstructure of religion or philosophy that he conscientiously can erect. He should add to his equipment for living every shred of strength and inspiration, moral, mental, or spiritual, that is in his power to secure. This simple working faith is opposed to no creed, is a substitute for none. It is but a primary
Starting point is 00:56:39 belief, a citadel, a refuge where the individual can retire for strength when the battle of life grows hard. A mere theory of life that remains but a theory is about as useful to a man as a gilt-edged menu as to a starving sailor on a raft in mid-ocean. It is irritating but not stimulating. No rule for higher living will help a man in the slightest, until he reach out and appropriate it for himself, until he make it practical in his daily life, until that seed of theory in his mind blossom into a thousand flowers of thought and word and act. If a man honestly seeks to live his best at all times, that determination is visible in every moment of his living. No trifle in his life can be too insignificant to reflect his principle of living. The sun illuminates and beautifies a fallen leaf
Starting point is 00:57:37 by the roadside, as impartially as a towering mountain peak in the Alps. Every drop of water in the ocean is an epitome of the chemistry of the whole ocean. Every drop is subject to precisely the same laws as dominate the united infinity of billions of drops that make that miracle of nature, men call the sea. No matter how humble the calling of the individual, how uninteresting and dull the round of his duties, he should do his best. he should dignify what he is doing by the mind he puts into it he should vitalize what little he has of power or energy or ability or opportunity in order to prepare himself to be equal to higher privileges when they come This will never lead man to that weak content that is satisfied with whatever falls to his lot.
Starting point is 00:58:30 It will rather fill his mind with that divine discontent that cheerfully accepts the best, merely as a temporary substitute for something better. The man who is seeking ever to do his best is the man who is keen, active, wide-awake, and aggressive. He is ever watchful of himself in trifles. His standard is not, what will the world say, but, is it worthy of me? Edwin Booth, one of the greatest actors on the American stage, would never permit himself to assume an ungraceful attitude,
Starting point is 00:59:05 even in his hours of privacy. In this simple thing he ever lived his best, on the stage every move was one of unconscious grace. Those of his company who were conscious of their emotions were the awkward ones, who were seeking in public to understand. undo or to conceal the carelessness of gestures and motions of their private life. The man who is slipshod and thoughtless in his daily speech,
Starting point is 00:59:31 whose vocabulary is a collection of anemic commonplaces, whose repetitions of phrases and extravagance of interjections act but as feeble disguises to his lack of ideas, will never be brilliant on an occasion when he longs to outshine the stars. Living at one's best is constant preparation for instant use. It can never make one over-precise, self-conscious, affected, or priggish. Education, in its highest sense, is conscious training of mind or body to act unconsciously. It is conscious formation of mental habits, not mere acquisition of information.
Starting point is 01:00:13 One of the many ways in which the individual unwisely eclipses himself is in his worship of the fetish of luck. He feels that all others are lucky and that whatever he attempts fails. He does not realize the untiring energy, the unremitting concentration, the heroic courage, the sublime patience that is the secret of some men's success. Their luck was that they had prepared themselves to be equal to their opportunity when it came and were awake to recognize it and receive it. his own opportunity came and departed unnoted it would not waken him from his dreams of some untold wealth that would fall into his lap so he grows discouraged and envies those whom he should emulate and he bandages his arm and chloroforms his energies and performs his duties in a perfunctory way or he passes through life just ever sampling lines of activity
Starting point is 01:01:12 The honest, faithful struggler should always realize that failure is but an episode in a true man's life, never the whole story. It is never easy to meet, and no philosophy can make it so, but the steadfast courage to master conditions, instead of complaining of them, will help him on his way. It will ever enable him to get the best out of what he has. He never knows the long series of vanquished failures that give solidity to someone else's success. He does not realize the price that some rich man, the innocent football of political malcontents and demagogues, has heroically paid for wealth and position. The man who has a pessimist doubt of all things, who demands a certified guarantee of his future, whoever feels his work will not be recognized or appreciated, or that after all, it is really not worthwhile,
Starting point is 01:02:07 will never live his best. He is dulling his capacity for real progress. He is dulling his capacity for real progress, by his hypnotic course of excuses for inactivity, instead of a strong tonic of reasons for action. One of the most weakening elements in the individual makeup is a surrender to the oncoming years. Man's self-confidence dims and dies in the fear of age. This new thought, he says, of some suggestion, tending to higher development,
Starting point is 01:02:36 is good. It is what we need. I am glad to have it for my children. I would have been happy to have had some such help when I was at school, but it is too late for me. I am a man advanced in years. This is but blind closing of life to wondrous possibilities. The knell of lost opportunity is never told in this life. It is never too late to recognize truth and to live by it. It requires only greater effort, closer attention, deeper concentration, but the impossible does not exist for
Starting point is 01:03:10 the man who is self-confident and is willing to pay the price in time and struggle for his success or development. Later in life, the assessments are heavier in progress, as in life insurance, but that matters not to the mighty self-confidence that will not grow old, while knowledge can keep it young. Socrates, when his hair whitened with the snow of age, learned to play on instruments of music. Cato, at four score, began his study. of Greek, and the same age saw Plutarch beginning with enthusiasm of a boy, his first lessons in Latin. The character of man, Theoprastus' greatest work, was begun on his 90th birthday. Chaucer's Canterbury Tales was the work of the poet's declining years. Rassard, the father of French poetry, whose sonnets
Starting point is 01:04:04 even translation cannot destroy, did not develop his poetic faculty until nearly 50. Benjamin Franklin at this age had just taken his really first steps of importance and philosophic pursuits. Arnold, the theologian and sage, translated Josephus in his 80th year. Winkleman, one of the most famous writers on classic antiquities, was the son of a shoemaker, and lived in obscurity and ignorance until the prime of life. Hobbes, the English philosopher, published his version of The Odyssey in his 87th year and his Iliad one year later. Cheval, the great French scientist, whose untiring labors in the realm of color have so enriched the world, was busy, keen, and active when death called him,
Starting point is 01:04:53 at the age of 103. These men did not fear age. These few names from the great muster role of the famous ones who defied the years should be voices of hope and heartening to every individual whose courage and confidence is weak. The path of truth, higher living, truer development in every phase of life, is never shut from the individual, unless he closes it himself. Let man feel this, believe it, and make this faith a real and living factor in his life, and there are no limits to his progress. He has but to live his best at all times, and rest calm and untroubled, no matter what results come to his efforts. The constant looking backward to what might have been, instead of forward to what may be. Instead of forward to what
Starting point is 01:05:40 may be, is a great weakener of self-confidence. This worry for the old past, this wasted energy, for that which no power in the world can restore, ever lessens the individual's faith in himself, weakens his efforts to develop himself for the future to the perfection of his possibilities. Nature in her beautiful love and tenderness says to man, weakened and worn and weary with the struggle. Do in the best way you can, the trifle that is under your heart. hand at this moment. Do it in the best spirit of preparation for the future, your thoughts suggest. Bring all the light of knowledge from all the past to aid you. Do this and you have done your best. The past is forever closed to you. It is closed forever to you. No worry, no struggle, no suffering,
Starting point is 01:06:31 no agony of despair can alter it. It is as much beyond your power as if it were a million years of eternity behind you. Turn all that path. with its sad hours, weakness and sin, its wasted opportunities, as light, in confidence and hope, upon the future. Turn it all in fuller truth and light, so as to make each trifle of this present a new past it will be a joy to look back to, each trifle a grander, nobler, and more perfect preparation for the future. The present in the future you can make from it is yours. The past has gone back with all its messages, all its history, all its records, to the God who loaned you the golden moments to use in obedience to his law. End of Chapter 6. Recording by Andrea Fiore.
Starting point is 01:07:28 Chapter 7 of the Majesty of Calmness. This Librevox recording is in the public domain. Recording by Andrea Fiore. The Majesty of Calmness by William George Jordan. Chapter 7 The Royal Road to Happiness During my whole life I have not had 24 hours of happiness. So said Prince Bismarck, one of the greatest statesman of the 19th century. 83 years of wealth, fame, honors, power, influenced prosperity and triumph,
Starting point is 01:08:03 years when he held an empire in his fingers, but not one day of happiness. Happiness is the greatest paradox in nature. It can grow in any soil, live under any conditions. It defies environment. It comes from within. It is the revelation of the depths of the inner life, as light and heat proclaim the sun from which they radiate. Happiness consists not of having, but of being,
Starting point is 01:08:31 not of possessing, but of enjoying. It is the warm glow of a heart at peace with itself. A martyr at the stake may have happiness that a king on his throne might envy. Man is the creator of his own happiness. It is the aroma of a life lived in harmony with high ideals. For what a man has, he may be dependent on others. For what he is rests with him alone. What he obtains in life is but acquisition.
Starting point is 01:09:01 But what he attains is growth. Happiness is the soul's joy and the possession of the intangible. Absolute, perfect, continuous happiness in life is impossible for the human. It would mean the consummation of attainments, the individual consciousness of a perfectly fulfilled destiny. Happiness is paradoxic because it may coexist with trial, sorrow, and poverty. It is the gladness of the heart, rising superior to all conditions. happiness has a number of understudies, gratitude, satisfaction, content and pleasure,
Starting point is 01:09:40 clever imitators that simulate its appearance rather than emulate its method. Gratification is a harmony between our desires and our possessions. It is ever incomplete. It is the thankful acceptance of part. It is a mental pleasure in the quality of what one receives, in unsatisfiedness as to the quantity. It may be an element in happiness,
Starting point is 01:10:06 but in itself it is not happiness. Satisfaction is a perfect identity of our desires and our possessions. It exists only so long as this perfect union and unity can be preserved. But every realized ideal gives birth to new ideals. Every step in advance reveals large domains of the unattained. Every feeding stimulates new appetites. Then the desires and possessions are no longer identical, no longer equal. New cravings call forth new activities.
Starting point is 01:10:41 The equiopoise is destroyed, and dissatisfaction re-enters. Man might possess everything tangible in the world, and yet not be happy, for happiness is the satisfying of the soul, not of the mind or the body. Disatisfaction, in its highest sense, is the keynote of all advance, the evidence of new aspirations, the guarantee of the progressive revelation of new possibilities. Content is a greatly overrated virtue. It is a kind of diluted despair. It is the feeling with which we continue to accept substitutes without striving for the realities.
Starting point is 01:11:22 Content makes the trained individual swallow vinegar and try to see. smack his lips as if it were wine. Content enables one to warm his hands at the fire of a past joy that exists only in memory. Content is a mental and moral chloroform that deadens the activities of the individual to rise to higher planes of life and growth. Man should never be contented with anything less than the best efforts of his nature can possibly secure for him. Content makes the world more comfortable for the individual, but it is the death-knell of progress.
Starting point is 01:12:00 Man should be content with each step of progress merely as a station, discontented with it as a destination, contented with it as a step, discontented with it as a finality. There are times when a man should be content with what he has, but never with what he is. But content is not happiness, neither is place. Pleasure. Pleasure is temporary. Happiness is continuous. Pleasure is a note. Happiness is a symphony. Pleasure may exist when conscious utters protests. Happiness, never. Pleasure may have its dregs and its lees, but none can be found in the cup of happiness. Man is the only animal that can be really happy. To the rest of the creation belong only weak imitations of the understudies.
Starting point is 01:12:52 happiness represents a peaceful attunement of a life with the standard of living it can never be made by the individual by himself for himself it is one of the incidental by-products of an unselfish life no man can make his own happiness the one object of his life and attain it any more than he can jump on the far end of his shadow if you would hit the bull's-eye of happiness on the target of life aim above it place Place other things higher than your own happiness, and it will surely come to you. You can buy pleasure. You can acquire content. You can become satisfied. But nature never put real happiness on the bargain counter. It is the undetachable accompaniment of true living.
Starting point is 01:13:40 It is calm and peaceful. It never lives in an atmosphere of worry or of hopeless struggle. The basis of happiness is the love of something outside self. Search every instance of happiness in the world, and you will find, when all the incidental features are eliminated, there is always the constant unchangeable element of love. Love of parent for child, love of man and woman for each other, love of humanity in some form, or a great life work into which the individual throws all his energies. Happiness is the voice of optimism, of faith, of simple, steadfast love. No cynic or pessimists can be really happy. A cynic is a man who is morally near-sighted and brags about it. He sees the evil in his own heart and thinks he sees the world. He lets a moat in his eye eclipse the sun.
Starting point is 01:14:38 An incurable cynic is an individual who should long for death, for life cannot bring him happiness, death might. The keynote of Bismarck's lack of happiness was his profound distrust. of human nature. There is a royal road to happiness. It lies in consecration, concentration, conquest, and conscience. Consecration is dedicating the individual life to the service of others, to some noble mission, to realizing some unselfish ideal. Life is not something to be lived through, it is something to be lived up to. It is a privilege, not a penal servitude of so many decades, on earth. Conssecration places the object of life above the mere acquisition of money as a finality. The man who is unselfish, kind, loving, tender, helpful, ready to lighten the burden of
Starting point is 01:15:36 those around him, to hearten the struggling ones, to forget himself sometimes in remembering others, is on the right road to happiness. Consecration is ever active, bold and aggressive, fearing not but possible disloyalty to high ideals. Concentration makes the individual life simpler and deeper. It cuts away the shams and pretences of modern living and limits life to its truest essentials. Worry, fear, useless regret, all the great wastes that sap mental, moral, or physical energy
Starting point is 01:16:13 must be sacrificed, or the individual needlessly destroys half the possibilities of living. A great purpose in life, something that unifies the strands and threads of each day's thinking, something that takes the sting from the petty trials, sorrows, sufferings, and blunders of life, is a great aid to concentration. Soldiers in battle may forget their wounds, or even be unconscious of them, in the inspiration of battling for what they believe is right. Concentration dignifies a humble life. It makes a great life, support. In morals, it is a shortcut to simplicity.
Starting point is 01:16:53 It leads to right for right's sake, without thought of policy or of reward. It brings calm and rest to the individual, a serenity that is but the sunlight of happiness. Conquest is the overcoming of an evil habit, the rising superior to opposition and attack, the spiritual exhalation that comes from resisting the invasion of the groveling material side of life. Sometimes when you are worn and weak with the struggle, when it seems that justice is a dream, that honesty and loyalty and truth count for nothing, that the devil is the only good paymaster, when hope grows dim and flickers, then is the time when you must tower in the great sublime faith that right must prevail. Then you must throttle these imps of doubt and despair. You must master
Starting point is 01:17:45 yourself to master the world around you. This is conquest. This is what counts. Even a log can float with the current. It takes a man to fight sturdily against an opposing tide that would sweep his craft out of its course. When the jealousies, the petty intrigues, and the meanness and the misunderstandings in life assail you, rise above them. Be like a lighthouse that alumes and beautifies, the snarling, swashing waves of the storm that threaten it, that seek to undermine it, and seek to wash over it. This is conquest. When the chance to win fame, wealth, success, or the attainment of your heart's desire, by sacrifice of honor or principle, comes to you, and it does not affect you long enough even to seem a temptation, you have been the victor. That too is conquest, and conquest is part of the royal road to happiness.
Starting point is 01:18:45 conscience as the mentor the guide and compass of every act leads ever to happiness when the individual can stay alone with his conscience and get its approval without using force or specious logic then he begins to know what real happiness is but the individual must be careful that he is not appealing to a conscious perverted or deadened by the wrongdoing and subsequent deafness of its owner the man who is honestly seeking to live his life in consecration, concentration and conquest, living from day to day as best he can, by the light he has, may rely explicitly on his conscience. He can shut his ears to what the world says, and find in the approval of his own conscience the highest earthly tribune, the voice of the infinite communing with the individual. Unhappiness is the hunger to get, happiness is the
Starting point is 01:19:44 hunger to give. True happiness must ever have the tinge of sorrow outlived, the sense of pain softened by the mellowing years, the chastening of loss that in the wondrous mystery of time transmutes our suffering into love and sympathy with others. If the individual should set out for a single day to give happiness, to make life happier, brighter and sweeter, not for himself, but for others, he would find a wondrous revelation of what happiness really is. The greatest of the world's heroes could not by any series of acts of heroism do as much real good as any individual living his whole life in seeking from day to day to make others happy. Each day there should be fresh resolution, new strength, and renewed
Starting point is 01:20:35 enthusiasm. Just for today might be the daily motto of thousands of societies throughout the country, composed of members bound together to make the world better through constant simple acts of kindness, constant deeds of sweetness and self-love, and happiness would come to them, in its highest and best form, not because they would seek to absorb it, but because they seek to radiate it. End of Chapter 7. End of the Majesty of Calmness by William George Jordan.

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